Idit Shemer (Yoel Levy) |
In this past year, as of March 2020, with the outbreak of the Covid--19 virus in Israel, the Jerusalem Baroque Orchestra has certainly not been somewhere “below the radar”. JBO audiences have enjoyed a number of on-line concerts live-streamed from various attractive venues. But, when the orchestra members took to the stage of the Jerusalem YMCA auditorium on March 17th 2021, the many people attending the JBO’s return to live performance could not contain their excitement, welcoming David Shemer and his ensemble with a barrage of clapping, shouts and whistles. Prof. Shemer, JBO founder and music director, welcomed the audience to the event. Jerusalem mayor Moshe Lion spoke briefly, expressing his praise for the orchestra and mentioning plans the Jerusalem Municipality has for permanent home quarters for the ensemble.
For “Back to Bach”, the ensemble
consisting of bowed instruments, harpsichord and theorbo, Johann Sebastian
shared the stage with Arcangelo Corelli. Bach
had studied Corelli's music, making his own arrangements of it. He also had
access to Corelli's music at the Leipzig library, from which he conducted
performances. As far as we know, Corelli did not write vocal
music; the closest connection he would make with the genre might possibly have
been the Sinfonia he wrote to “Santa Beatrice d’Este” an oratorio composed by
Giovanni Lorenzo Lulier (c.1662-1700), who was a colleague of Corelli. The
oratorio premiered in 1689 at the palace of Cardinal Benedetto Pamphili, who
had written the libretto. Directed by David Shemer, the JBO concert opened with
this seldom-performed piece. Soloists were Noam Schuss-violin 1,
Lilia Slavny-violin 2 and ‘cellist Orit Messer-Jacobi. Plumbing the depths of
the splendid D minor work, the players presented its tragic, searching
dissonances, its noble character and buoyant dance associations with subtlety,
elegance and balance. The same three artists made up the concertino for
Corelli’s Concerto Grosso Op. 6 No.4, another work in the da chiesa form, this, however, in D major. From the short majestic, festive introduction, the
players kept audience members captivated following the work’s changes of mood
and emotion, as well as some exciting virtuosic exchange between Schuss and
Slavny.
In its 32 years of
existence, the JBO has performed many of J.S.Bach’s larger and smaller sacred vocal works. In this
program, however, the audience was presented with two of Bach’s secular vocal
works, the first being Cantata BWV 209 “Non sa che sia dolore” (One knows not
what sorrow is), one of the only two cantatas the composer had written to
Italian texts. Although its date, purpose, the text author or even the
identity of the dear friend departing on the sea journey described remain unclear (some have
even questioned whether Bach was the composer), what is certain is that, from
the very first notes of the fetching da capo instrumental Sinfonia, one realizes that this work
is indeed a jewel. Written for solo soprano (Daniela Skorka) with orchestral
accompaniment, it strongly features obbligato flute (Idit Shemer, traverso),
giving ample opportunity for both vocal- and instrumental soloists to
shine. From
the Sinfonia (could it be a
movement from a lost flute concerto?) Idit Shemer creates a mood which
balances serenity with slight sadness, taking the listener through three
of the cantata’s five movements with suave, expressive playing and technical
mastery.
Skorka’s fresh, natural, unforced singing addresses the text, its nuances and its moods, her clarity of
diction and precise phrasing adding to the warmth, depth and uplifting spirit
of the music.
If the year of Covid-19 anxiety has left JBO audiences in need of a morale boost and a good chuckle, J.S.Bach’s Coffee Cantata “Schweigt stille, plaudert nicht” (Be quiet, chatter not) BWV 211 (libretto: Picander) absolutely filled the bill. With coffee having become the fashionable drink in European cities at Bach's time (apparently, Bach himself was a coffee enthusiast) this cantata, written around 1735, was performed by the Collegium Musicum at Zimmerman’s coffee house, a local social centre for gentlemen in Leipzig. Essentially a miniature comic opera, it tells of Lieschen (Daniela Skorka), a young vivacious woman, who is addicted to coffee, and her disgruntled father Schlendrian (literally: Stick in the Mud), played by baritone Yair Polishook, who threatens- and argues with his caffeine-obsessed daughter about her habit. Schlendrian unsuccessfully tries to bribe her into renouncing caffeine in favour of settling down with a husband, while Lieschen evades his commandments with clever manoeuvres and outright disobedience. The smaller role of the narrator was played heartily by young tenor Itamar Hildesheim. Idit Shemer played the obbligato flute role. The only props on the YMCA stage were an antique chair and a table with a coffee pot, cups and coffee grinder. Moving around the entire stage, Skorka (now dressed casually in the style of today’s teenage girls, cell ‘phone in hand) and Polishook delivered free, impressive and animated characterizations of daughter and father, engaging in the text’s banter in keeping with the often-humorous burlesque nature of the style. Their combination of polished vocal performance and mirthful tomfoolery made for rewarding theatrical performance. Signing out with the wink of an eye, the three vocalists sent the audience home with a smile and a few home truths, as expressed in the rollicking terzetto:
'The cat does not leave the mouse.
Young ladies remain coffee addicts.
The mother loves her cup of coffee.
The grandmother also drank it.
Who can blame the daughters?'
Itamar Hildesheim,Daniela Skorka,Yair Polishook (Maya Sapiro-Taien) |
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